This website is for students and teachers. It contains links to schemes
of work for GCSE and A-level Physics and UK National Curriculum Science.
The author is a teacher working internationally. It was originally
designed to help students access interactive pages complimenting the Science and
Physics lessons and also for students who had missed a lesson they could go
online and see the scheme of work and try out the interactive resources to help
stay up to date. Over time more and more resources have been added to
enable the collaborative sharing of schemes of work.

Some useful hidden content:

Q/As - syllabus content from GCSE Science / Physics converted into questions and
answers. The student can print out a
Science Q/A.

Many of the links above point to exam databases.
These are links to past paper questions and their answers that have been grouped
into topics and keywords. There are links to multiple choice questions (MCQ -
which are self marking) and also to structured questions (the ones you write on)
- double click on a question to write on them - and then to check your
answers you click the button marked "view examiners mark scheme".
Some databases are more complete than others. The Physics ones are fairly
good. The Maths one is growing. The Chemistry and Biology ones need
topics and keywords assigning - something I never have time for. If you
want to offer to help please get in touch by sending me a comment via
this link. On a good day I
am also prepared to help answer questions and solve problems for students - it
really does depend on how busy I am.

The databases have also been designed with teachers in mind. Each database
has links at the bottom. The most useful ones are:

[rand] - the database will find around
20 random questions from the database - this number can be altered if you
change the ran=20 part of the hyperlink to another number (min 5 & max 100
if it can find them)

[build] - puts the database into
'test
building' mode - questions can be selected by ticking the Build checkbox and
then click Collect at the bottom. You can repeat this with different
topic or keyword search until the test has been built up. The link to
this test is a greyed out hyperlink that looks something like this
?q=497,3148 - which are the unique ids of all the questions you selected.
This link can be book-marked or sent out if you want to do the same test
another time.

[most difficult] - this is an experimental
mode for IB MCQ which after clicking should try to rank questions that have a
difficulty index set. To use it click the [most difficult] link and
then change board to IB and topic to ALL. A very low DI percentage means
that only a small percentage of students who did that question got it
correct.

[ans] is for my use as a teacher. I
input a password and it allows me to create tests that then lists the
answers or mark schemes after the questions without all the multiple choice
or mark scheme buttons. No I'm not saying what the password is - it
would wreck the database for student use. If you know me well enough
you could figure it out :-)

Some of the databases now have a
sign-up procedure before
they can be used. This is still being tested. Please
contact me
if it causes problems. The reasons for the sign-up are:

after successful free registration,
questions that you have clicked on are stored under your username.
This should then hide any questions that you have done from the next
time you visit. It means you don't keeping getting the same
questions time and again.

I am curious if anyone
is finding this site useful and the sign-up helps to monitor usage.